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FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1950 C(OAST GUARD | TAKE MOOSE IN11-5TILT Second-Half Standings W L Pet GB Elks 24190 1000 - Moose 183 333 1'% C. Guard a8 333 1% In what started out as a pitcher’s duel but ended up in a one-sided slugging contest last evening the Coast Guard won from the Moose 11 to 5. Krause of the Guard stru out 13 batters while walking three and hitting one batter. The Moose used four pitchers for total strike- outs of 12 and seven hits. Three Guard players hit homers, Phils Move To 2-Game Lead Now (By the As The Phils’ today with a and a St bows. | Curt 21-year-old lefty from s the bonus prize whose four- hitter last night boosted | the hystling Phils into a (\\U-;.',.\m” lead in the National Dick Sisler is the Cardinal hand- me-down with the home, run punch that converted Simmons' effort into a 3-2 Louis. Whipping the Cards is old stuff sociated Press) Whiz Kids ride high $65,000 ‘bor baby Louis castoff taking the Simmons all with one man on base. They were | for both. Simmons holds three de- Morrison, Krause and Kane. The | cisions over Eddie Dyer’s club Guardsmen hitting two-basers were | Against St. Louis, ex-Card Sisler is Morrison, Dorris and Francis with | slugging .447. Rolison and Shepard hitting (\\n-; It was a “big game” that Sim- baggers for the Moose. | mons and Sisler won for the Phils, { opening their third and all-import- STATISTIOS ant swing through the west. Whip- Chapt: Gurd ab h 0 afping the Red Birds in their own Morrison, 1f b: gl ipm'k means . the Phils can’t be xDorris, rf 6 AL 0|rmsl\>(l from ‘the lead before they Tibbitts, 2b 4 1 0. Y jeave town, Wilber, ¢ R T Krause, p | o Y 2- Simmons, a whiz since he found Zambrano, 3b 3 0 0 1]control, walked only two men and xKane, cf 3 2 1 o0fstruck out six. quez, 1b 3 0 u) Boston skidded three” full games xFrancis, ss . A e behind the Phils, losing to Cin- xJanero, cf ... 0 0 0 o]cinnati, 7-3, as the Reds won their xCerkal, rf 1.0 fifth straight. Too bad Cincy took Totals 32 13 21 4{so long getting started. Since June xIn the sixth, Dorris to ss, Janero to cf, Cerkal to rf and Kane and Francis out. Moose ab h o a}Johnny Sain for four runs in the xxxxRolison, 1b 4 1 3 0jfeighth, ruining his bid for win No.| xxWerner, 3b 4 1 1 1]13. An error by Buddy Kerr, singles xxxMcCagg, cf 0 0 0 of]by Ted Kluszewski, Connie Ryan xNeilson, ¢ 4 3 10 3}and Joe Adcock and a fly ball Shepard, p 4 2 4 0]scored the runs. Sanford, If & 00550 xxxxMetealf, s ......8 1 0 0| gooo Exsachie Soe (OuE { Milled, 2b Sat i rooklyn lost, the services of its| Mansk tH 5 6@ southpaw ace, Preacher Roe, for an = | AR indefinite period, while bowing to RERkETon, o 1 0 0 0fcpicago, 6-4. The double disappoir Totals 30 10 21 5 3 0 ;. . xIn the third, Neilson to pitcher, Shepard to catcher. xxIn the fifth with none out, Werner to pitcher, Neilson to 3b. xxxIn thefounth; kerton to cf for McCagg (in- jured). xxxxIn the fifth, with one out, Rol on to pitcher, Werner to 3b, Neilson "to “catchér, Shepard to ss, Metcalf to 1b. Score by Innings Coast Guard 102161 0-11131 Moose 1020002—-5101 Runs: Morrison 2, Tibbitts, Wil- ber, Krause 2, Zambrano, Kane 2, Francis 2, Rolison, McCagg 2, Pin- kerton, Neilson. Home runs: Morri- son, Krause, Kane. 2b hits: Morri- son, Dorris, Francis, Rolison, Shep- HB: McCagg. Errors: Tib- son to Shepard. 7, Moose 8. First on balls, Krause 3, Shepard 3, Neilson 3, Werner 1, Rolison 0. Struck out, by: Krause 13, Shepard 2, Neilson 3, Werner 0, Rolison 7. WP: Krause. off: s: Wilber and ELKS VS C. GUARD SUNDAY ‘The Coast Guard will play host to the Elks nine Sunday afternoon even if they loose but the Moose will be pushed into the cellar spot. WIL GAMES Final scores of WIL games last{handling of funeral arrangements, night are as follows: ‘Yakima 9-5, Vancouver 5-0. Tacoma 5, Spokane 4. Tri-City 4, Victoria 3. ‘Wenatchee 4, Salem 3 (13 innings) e T D e e 20 they swept 15 of 21, hottest pace in the league. The awakened Reds hopped on ment on the opening of their third western tour was a bitter pill for the wobbly Dodgers. Roe injured his left shoulder! pitching to Hank Sauer in the third. | Paul Minner held his old Dodger mates to five hits in a route-going job. He helped win his own game with a pair of singles. Rain washed out the scheduled day game between the New York Giants and Pittsburgh. Bad weather also postponed two night games in the American—Cleveland at New York and St. Louis at Philadelphia, Detroit boosted its American League lead over the idle New York Yankees to 3': games as Hal New- houser set down a ninth inning Washington rally for a 5-2 decision. Clyde Vollmer, Ted William’s re- placement, smashed a homer and two doubles in the Boston Red Sox’ 8-7 “squeaker” over Chicago. Rain ut the game to seven and a half| innings. Vollmer, playing left field with Williams out of action because of a broken elbow, drove home two runs. Vern Stephens also homered his 19th, in a five-run first inning attack that routed Boston's old nemesis, Ray Scarborough. WANT ADS BRING RESULTS CARD OF THANKS For the kindness of many, par- ticularly Ma Guerin, and Jack Guerin and Mrs. Pearce. For the expressions of sweet sympathy and of appreciation of dear departed Jimmy; in appreciation of tne flowers, the notes of condolence und words of courage. For all care- rul and considerate planning and |and In memory of Jimmie E'\rras. ihusband, I write this expression | of thanks to you dear people of 1Douglas and Juneau. Edith’ Barras, his wife when you Beawed By A Unit Of One Of The Worlds Great Brewing SICKS' SEATILE BREWING & MALTING CO, SEATTLE, USA. [For friendly cheer-- serve EXTRA PALE serve beer victory over second place St. 'RAINIERS IN THIRD ~ SPOT NOW By JIM HUBBART (Associated Press Sportswriter) With Oakland holding a one- jame lead in the Pacific Coast gue race today, it begins to look if the Hollywood Stas, the San Padres and the first divi same again Once morg the Acorns the Hollywoods last night as Dieg sion will never be the 0 this time by 9 to 2. The Seattle Rainiers, meanwhile bed San Diego 1again, 13 to and took over third place in the proces At Oakland, it was a battle be- tween the Hollywood crutch brigade and the old at home. Hard y player nts for the past month, the Stars saw another key ersonality rendered hors de co st night. A hard hit grounder d one of infielder Murray Franklin’s ribs. Bobby Hofman and Earl Zimmer- Iman drilled home runs for the | Acorns, both with men on, and Dick Wakefield bagged a pair of doubles. The Oaks had a 5 to 0 lead in the third inning. Down in the second division, Seattle’s erstwhile habitat, rookie Bob Drilling pitched Portland to a 5 to 2 triumph over Sacramento ind Los Angeles used the h run play in crushing San Fran- cisco. 5 to 3. | The Rainiers smote three San Diego moundsmen for 13 blows and this, combined with neat strategy, was more than enough to drown out | the booming Padre bats. Seattle used the hit-and-run effectively. One tally came in on a squeeze play. Buster Adams poked a round- tripper for the Padtes, with the bases loaded. Whitely Wietelmann | also lofted on2 out of the park. But it was at Los Angeles where the home run business really paid dividends. The Angels scored all five of their markers with homers —two by Les Layton with Gene Baker aboard each time, and an- other by Stan Spence. STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS Pacific Coast League W L Pet Oakland 63 42 600 Hollywood 63 44 Seattle 54 52 San Diego 55 54 San Francisco ... 52 55 Portland .49 54 Los Angeles 48 60 Sacramento 43 65 394 National League W L Pet Philadelphia 45 29 608 St. Louis 43 31 .581 Boston 42 32 .568 Brooklyn 38 33 535 ‘| Chicago 34 38 472, New York 3¢ 40 459 Cincinnati 30 44 405 Pittsburgh 27 56 370 American League W L Pet Detroit .50 26 658 New York 47 30 610 Cleveland 46 32 590 | Boston 43 35 551 ‘Washington 3 42 456 Chicago oy 34 46 425 { Philadelphia . 7 49 355 ' St. Louis .. .27 49 355 thumped | me | 5 fight again.” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —JUNEAU, ALASKA SOFTBALLERS PLAY/ {11 RUNS IN GAMES LAST NIGHT speciaL on TonigkT, ONE INNING § BY RED SOX . e first softball game last night > Evergreen Bowl was quite a tween the Town Criers and the Car- dinal Club. The Criers were sparked | by the heavy hitting and playing of | shortfield Merritt and cen- with two on, and Birdie Tebbetts hit for the circuit batting splurge. The at the pitcher’s duel between Sgt. Nichols of the A.C.S. and young Dick For-| —— rest of the Dept. of Interior. The| BOSTON, July 14—®—The Bos- | final score was A.CSS. 7, Dept. of| ton Red Sox scored 11 times dur-) | Interior 4. Batteries for the A.CS.|ing a weird third inning rally today were McTibben, catcher; Sgt. Nich- |as Ellis Kinder registered his 13th _<;1\, pitcher. For the Dept. of In';rnn»l'rulz\'v pitching triumph over | terior, Fred Proudy, catcher; DIicK|the Chicago White Sox, 13-1, with t, pitcher. {a five-hit performance. Junior The second game was played be- | Stephens lashed his 20th homer during that terrific | tertielder E cott and the fine| CHICAGO, July 14—P—A walk pitching of Rod Rohrberg which | single and a forceout in the sev- enabled the Criers to come out With | enth inning gave the Brooklyn a good margin in the scoring bY | podgers the lone run they needed a total of 9 to 3 today to beat the Chicago Cubs, 1 Tim O'Day turned in a fine pitch= | (o 0. The single was off the bat of ing job for the Cardinal Club With | Gene Hermanski, Erv Patica, mak- his speedball, but was unable t0|ing only his second start of the sea- hold the Criers down. Batteries for | son allowed five hits. the Criers, Jim Vuille, catcher; Rod | 3 | Rolurbers, pitcher. For the Card- inals: Jar pitcher. es, ¢ 0 S5 WLLIAMS' ARM IS A special game will be phycd onient at e gveroreen ot ve- | NOW IN SPLINTERS tween a group of All-Star High chool players and a picked te un‘ BOSTON, July 14—{M—Rncour- from the Juneau Softball Ledguei aged by the immediate medical re- starting at 6:30 o'clock The standings for the second half | are as follows: ports of Ted Williams" elbow surgery, General Joe Cronin today said the Boston splintered- Manager Town Criers “3"" Lost| ped Sox’ $125,000-a-year salaried A C. S 2 1 | slugger would continue on the club’s Aol 2 3 ' 5 lactive player list. 2)1‘:)((““.;1] 'C"]t:l:“" ; 2[ “I don’t want to put Ted on the | sidelines officially until such action {appears absolutely necessary,’ | Cronin explained. JOE louls GOING | If Williams was declared dis- abled by his club, it could obtain BROKE. IS GOING ia replacement for him and still re- !main inside the major league's 25- { player limit. LEADERS IN B. B. NEW YORK, July 14—iP—Joe| Louis is coming back to fight Ezzard Charles in September if he! Leaders in the major leagues can settle his income tax prob-|through Thursday games are: lems. American League Jim Norris, President of the In-| Batting—Kell, Detroit, .363; Doby, ternational Boxing Club, gave out |Cleveland, 352. I the news when he revealed plans for! Runs Batted In — Stephens, Bos- | a Louis-Charles bout at Yankee!ton, 84; Williams and Dropo, Bos- Stadium in the last week of Sep- |ton, 83. tember. The date probably will be| Home Runs — Williams, Boston Thursday, Sept. 28. land Rosen, Cleveland, 25. ! “Joe owes the government a con- | Pitching — McDermott, Boston, siderable sum of money,” said Nor- {5-1, .833. ris. “The only way he can ever pay | National League it and get straightened out i5 to| Batting — Robinson, Brooklyn, |.363; Musial, St. Louis, .348. Norris said Louis got into tax dif-| Runs Batted In — Kiner, Pitts- ficulties a couple of years ago be-!burgh, 65; Sauer, Chicago, 62. cause the government disallowed | certain deductions he had taken on!24; Sauer, Chicago, Ennis, Phila»[ advice of his auditors and counsel |delphia and Snider, Brooklyn, 17. He pointed out that the champ’s in-| Pitching — Miller, Philadelphia, | vestments hadn’t turned out too 8-0, 1.000. i well. H S T A Y | | AT JUNEAU HOTEL | FSEUEA | ' | Cpl. and Mrs. R. F. Brown came | hue from Whitehorse yesterday by |Pan American Airways and are | guests at the Juneau Hotel. i 1 Stars of games in the majnrs‘ | played Thursday are: ‘ Red | Batting — Clyde Vollmer, Sox — broke into lineup as Ted | Williams’ replacement and hit homer and two doubles in 8-7 vic- tory over Chicago. Pitching — Curt Simmons, Phils | —tamed Cardinals with four hits, 3-2, as Phils upped National Leaguu lead to two games. 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